Red Cell Disorders |
* Hematology Division, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT;
° Hematology Division, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, GA, USA;
# Pediatric-Hematology-Oncology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA;
@ ARUP Laboratories, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
Correspondence: Josef T. Prchal, University of Utah, Hematology Division, 30 North 1900 East, Utah 4C416, Salt Lake City, USA. E-mail: josef.prchal{at}hsc.utah.edu
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Hb Monroe results from a splice site point mutation (G- >C) in the last nucleotide of β globin exon 1, which is also the penultimate nucleotide of codon 30 of the β globin peptide (AGG->ACG; Arg->Thr). The molecular basis of its thalassemic phenotype is unknown. A 29-year old, asymptomatic woman of Asian-Indian descent (Bengali extraction) was referred to us because of elevated serum ferritin (>3,000 ng/mL). She had microcytic anemia (Hb 9.5 gm %, MCV 68 fL). A Star plus MRI revealed no increase in cardiac iron but hepatic siderosis; liver biopsy revealed 4+ liver iron, significant fibrosis, and iron in both hepatocytes and macrophages. No mutations of HFE, ferroportin, and hemojuvelin genes were detected. HPLC revealed: HbF 51%, HbE 43.2%, HbA2 5.8%. A compound heterozygosity for HbE/β0-thalassemia was suspected. β globin gene sequencing revealed HbE and a missense mutation (β globin IVS1 (–1) G->C). The asymptomatic brother of the proband was found to have anemia (Hb 11.5 gm %, microcytosis MCV 70 fL), HbF 8.5 %, HbA 87.2%, HbA2 5.0%, and heterozygosity for Hb Monroe mutation. The aim of our study was to determine the molecular basis of the thalassemia phenotype associated with Hb Monroe mutation in the probands brother and in an Afro-American family with two members, known to be heterozygous for Hb Monroe. Clinical and laboratory parameters of the study subjects are summarized in Table 1.
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Table 1. Clinical and laboratory parameters in our study subjects: A) Asian Indian (Bengali) female (proband), compound heterozygous for Hb Monroe and Hb E; B) Asian Indian (Bengali) male (probands brother), heterozygous for Hb Monroe; C) African American female #1, heterozygous for Hb Monroe; D) African American female #2, heterozygous for Hb Monroe.
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After the original reports in 1989, Hb Monroe has been reported in low frequency, mostly in compound heterozygosity with other β globin mutations.1–5 The original studies suggested either unstable mutant peptide or aberrantly processed mRNA to be the molecular basis of thalassemic phenotype but no study examining native mRNA has been reported. We did not detect mutant peptide in fresh hemolysate or in reticulocytes. The cultured late normoblasts revealed ~1% of unidentified peptide but its further analysis by mass spectroscopy revealed it to be glycated fetal hemoglobin. In contrast, both the original reports6,7 described a small amount of unknown Hb thought to be Monroe. However, we could not confirm these reports using more definitive methodology. We could not detect any splice variants when full-length β globin cDNA were examined using two different primer sets for cDNA amplification. Sequencing of the amplified cDNA revealed only normal β globin mRNA transcript. Furthermore, no promoter region or stop codon mutations, deletions or splicing mutations were found from promoter – 90 region to 3' UTR including poly-A region.
Quantitative β globin expression assay revealed diminished β globin mRNA (70% reduction) in an Asian Indian subject with haplotype (+ + + + –) as well as in two Afro- American subjects heterozygous for Hb Monroe with, however, different β globin haplotype (– – + + –) (Figure 1). Similarly diminished β globin mRNA in all our subjects present in different β globin haplotypes also rules out the unlikely possibility of an unidentified promoter mutation present in trans.
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Figure 1. β globin quantitative gene expression profile from subjects heterozygous for Hb Monroe mutation b (relative percent expression compared with healthy controls): (1) average value of three healthy individuals (100%); (2) Asian Indian (Bengali) male (21%); (3) Afro-American female #1 (25%); (4) Afro-American female #2 (27%).
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- and β-thalassemia with β chain variants. Hemoglobin 1991;15:441-58.[Medline]
2β230(B12) Arg----Thr, a variant associated with β-thalassemia due to A G----C substitution adjacent to the donor splice site of the first intron. Hemoglobin 1989;13:67-74.[Web of Science][Medline]
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